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Vitamin E could help 40% of Diabetics
ward off Heart Attacks
Newswise — Vitamin E
supplements can significantly reduce the
risk of heart attacks and related deaths for
diabetics who carry a particular version of
a gene, according to researchers at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology and
the Clalit Health Services in Israel.
After 18 months of
treatment, people with the haptoglobin (Hp)
2-2 gene who took 400 International Units (IU)
of vitamin E daily had more than 50 percent
fewer heart attacks, strokes, and related
deaths than Hp 2-2 patients who took a
placebo pill. 40% of individuals with
diabetes carry the Hp 2-2 gene.
The researchers will
present the results on November 5 at the
American Heart Meetings in Orlando, Florida.
The full study will appear in the November
21 online edition of the journal
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular
Biology.
Most of the difference
came from the reduced number of heart
attacks among those taking vitamin E. In the
group of 1,434 Hp 2-2 individuals taking
part in the study, seven people had a heart
attack, compared to 17 who did not take the
vitamin. Dr. Andrew Levy, of the Technion
Faculty of Medicine, said there were no side
effects observed in patients who took
vitamin E.
The study suggests that
genetic testing for the Hp 2-2 gene “may be
useful to identify a large group of diabetes
individuals who could potentially derive
cardiovascular benefit from a very
inexpensive treatment,” Levy said.
The finding is a new
answer to an old question: can antioxidant
vitamins such as vitamin E help prevent
heart disease? Previously, cardiologists
routinely prescribed vitamin E for their
patients, but the practice has dwindled as
several major studies in the past decade
showed no heart-protective effects and
potential harm from vitamin E mega-doses.
However, Levy and
colleagues suspected that there might be one
group of patients who could benefit from
vitamin E: diabetic individuals with a
particular variant of the haptoglobin gene.
Haptoglobin is a powerful antioxidant
protein that stabilizes the iron-rich red
blood cell molecule called hemoglobin,
preventing inflammation in the walls of
arteries.
There are several
versions of the haptoglobin gene. In
previous studies, Levy and colleagues showed
that Hp 2-2 is an inferior antioxidant
compared to its genetic siblings, and that
this difference is exaggerated in patients
with diabetes. The researchers also
discovered that diabetic patients with Hp
2-2 are two-to-three times more likely than
other diabetics to suffer a cardiovascular
event such as a heart attack.
“This version of the
gene does not determine whether or not an
individual will develop diabetes but rather
whether an individual with diabetes is
susceptible to developing the devastating
complications associated with diabetes such
as heart disease, kidney disease or visual
loss,” Levy noted.
A genetic test for Hp
2-2 is commercially available, said Levy,
who is also a consultant for Synvista
Therapeutics, which owns a patent on the use
of Hp testing to predict diabetic
complications.
By making a kit, the
group hopes to considerably lower the price
of testing. According to Levy, the test
would cost about $30 and only have to be
done only once.
The Technion-Israel
Institute of Technology is Israel's leading
science and technology university. Home to
the country’s winners of the Nobel Prize in
science, it commands a worldwide reputation
for its pioneering work in nanotechnology,
computer science, biotechnology,
water-resource management, materials
engineering, aerospace and medicine. The
majority of the founders and managers of
Israel's high-tech companies are alumni.
Based in New York City, the American
Technion Society (ATS) is the leading
American organization supporting higher
education in Israel, with 21 offices around
the country.
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